Dayton Daily News

19 KILLED IN BLAST AT BRITAIN CONCERT

Police are treating blast at Ariana Grande concert as terrorist attack.

- By Griff Witte and Peter Holley

An explosion at a pop concert in the northern English city of Manchester late Monday left at least 19 people dead and about 59 others injured, according to police.

“This is currently being treated as a terrorist incident until police know otherwise,” the Greater Manchester Police said in a statement. Witnesses interviewe­d by the

BBC reported hearing a loud blast following a performanc­e by Amer- ican pop singer Ariana Grande at Manchester Arena. Police said the blast occurred around 10:30 p.m. Initial evidence at the scene suggested the attack may have been a suicide bombing, according to two U.S. security officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigat­ion. British authoritie­s, who were meeting in emergency sessions across Manchester and London, did not immediatel­y confirm those reports.

If confirmed as a terrorist attack, it would be the worst strike on British soil since 2005, when bombers killed 54 people on London trains and buses.

Cellphone video showed chaotic scenes of people screaming and running in the aftermath of the blast. The arena was packed with attendees and pink balloons that had fallen from the ceiling during the concert’s final song. Initially, concertgoe­rs said they thought popping balloons had set off a panic.

But witnesses later reported seeing the prone bodies of those who had been wounded and killed, as well as others who were streaked with blood and were staggering away from the scene. Some were injured in the rush to get out.

The hospital, Wythenshaw­e, said it was dealing with “mass casualties.”

Heavily armed police and emergency services swarmed the arena, with ambulances, their blue lights flashing, rushing to the scene.

The local emergency-response service advised the public to call only “for life-threatenin­g emergencie­s.”

Many of those attending the concert were teenagers. Witnesses reported that outside the arena, parents were franticall­y attempting to locate their children.

A father told the BBC that he was leaving the arena with his wife and daughter when the blast blew him through a set of doors. Afterward, the man, identified as Andy, said he saw about 30 people “scattered everywhere. Some of them looked dead.”

Separated from his wife and daughter, he said, he “looked at some of the bodies trying to find my family.”

He later found them, uninjured.

“It was really scary,” Michelle Sullivan, who was attending the concert with her 12- and 15-year-old daughters, told the BBC. “Just as the lights have gone down, we heard a really loud explosion. ... Everybody screamed.”

“When we got out, they just said, ‘Keep on running, keep on running.’ ”

Karen Ford, a witness, told the BBC that “there were kids outside, crying on the phone, trying to find their parents.”

Concertgoe­rs said that they saw nuts and bolts littering the ground near the blast scene and that the smell of explosives hung heavily in the air.

The singer was “OK,” a spokesman for Grande’s record label told the Reuters news agency.

Around 1:30 a.m., police announced that there would be a controlled explosion after a suspicious device was found. A loud bang was heard minutes later.

The arena has a capacity of 21,000. Manchester transport police said the explosion occurred in the arena’s foyer, where people were congregati­ng to buy concert merchandis­e. Manchester Arena said the attack took place just outside the facility, in a public space.

Though nobody immediatel­y claimed responsibi­lity for Monday’s violence, scenes of bloodied, panicked concert-goers streaking for safety brought to mind similar images at the Bataclan theater in Paris in November 2015. The concert hall became the scene of extreme carnage after multiple gunmen burst in during a show by the American rock band Eagles of Death Metal and began shooting. The attack, for which Islamic State later claimed responsibi­lity, killed 89 people and injured hundreds more, becoming the deadliest event on French soil since World War II.

Britain has had fewer terrorist attacks in recent years than many of its European neighbors. Monday night’s blast came two months after a careening driver left four people dead on London’s Westminste­r Bridge, then stabbed to death a police officer at the gates of Parliament.

Grande is a 23-year-old pop singer and actress who has been in the public spotlight since 2010, when she began appearing on the Nickelodeo­n television show “Victorious.” More recently, the former teen idol has been touring to promote her third studio album, “Dangerous Woman.” She has sold more than 1.7 million albums in recent years.

The singer has more than 45 million followers on Twitter. Grande is also one of the most popular people on Instagram, with 105 million followers — more than even Beyonce, Taylor Swift or Kim Kardashian. She was scheduled to play two shows in London later this week before traveling to Belgium, according to her tour dates.

 ?? PETER BYRNE / PA VIA AP ?? Emergency services personnel speak to people outside Manchester Arena after reports of an explosion at the venue during an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester, England, on Monday. Police say at least 19 are dead.
PETER BYRNE / PA VIA AP Emergency services personnel speak to people outside Manchester Arena after reports of an explosion at the venue during an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester, England, on Monday. Police say at least 19 are dead.
 ?? PETER BYRNE / PA VIA AP ?? Armed police stand guard Monday after the explosion. Manchester residents were advised to call emergency services for life-threatenin­g emergencie­s only.
PETER BYRNE / PA VIA AP Armed police stand guard Monday after the explosion. Manchester residents were advised to call emergency services for life-threatenin­g emergencie­s only.
 ?? JOEL GOODMAN / LONDON NEWS PICTURES ?? An injured concertgoe­r is helped by police and emergency responders at the Manchester Arena.
JOEL GOODMAN / LONDON NEWS PICTURES An injured concertgoe­r is helped by police and emergency responders at the Manchester Arena.
 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R FURLONG / GETTY IMAGES ?? Police and parents escort concertgoe­rs away from the arena, which holds 21,000 people at capacity. Police say some were injured in the rush to exit the venue, and that the blast occurred in the building’s foyer.
CHRISTOPHE­R FURLONG / GETTY IMAGES Police and parents escort concertgoe­rs away from the arena, which holds 21,000 people at capacity. Police say some were injured in the rush to exit the venue, and that the blast occurred in the building’s foyer.
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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Emergency services arrive at the arena. The blast happened at 10:30 p.m., just as lights would have gone down for Ariana Grande’s (above) performanc­e, said a mother attending with her daughters.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Emergency services arrive at the arena. The blast happened at 10:30 p.m., just as lights would have gone down for Ariana Grande’s (above) performanc­e, said a mother attending with her daughters.

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